The new app indicates storm shelter locations, as well as how many people are likely to be in a given shelter and their medical needs.

Courtesy of Shonn Neidel

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Originally published on August 23, 2015 10:08 pm

After a devastating tornado rolled through Moore, Okla., last May, firefighters were scrambling to pull people out of storm shelters. Actually finding those shelters, though, was difficult. Landmarks had been swept away, and the town's emergency dispatcher was overwhelmed with calls.

Shonn Neidel was one of the firefighters rushing to rescue people that day, and he quickly saw a problem.

"We decided to just go out into the neighborhood and see if we could help anybody," Neidel says. The crews had addresses of homes, he says, "and that's all we ever really thought we needed."

But when they reached an affected neighborhood, it looked like a landfill, with hundreds of homes and all their contents, from mattresses to cars to insulation, blended together. The street signs and house numbers were gone.

"That's when I really realized that we really didn't have a great system," Neidel says.

Because they didn't know where to dig, it took firefighters three days to check all the shelters to make sure no one was trapped. Even for a fit firefighter, the endless digging was overwhelming.

That's where the idea for a new app was born. "If I could walk up and say, 'This is where we're going to dig,' ... it would speed [rescue efforts] up a lot," Neidel says.

He's an easygoing guy with a quick smile, and he likes when things work. The existing storm shelter registry didn't.

Neidel had worked at IBM as a field tech before he became a firefighter. After the tornado, he recruited his computer programmer brother-in-law, Dan McIntyre, and they started building an app that firefighters can use to find people more efficiently — even when cell service is down.

"If you've ever been in a situation like this, it's already stressful enough, and it's chaotic," Neidel says. "You don't want to try to learn something in that situation. I call it nuts and bolts. It's simple, but it works."

In his neatly pressed, gray-blue uniform, Neidel holds an iPad and points to a dot on a map as he demonstrates how the app works. Drawing information from a database of shelter registrations, it shows how many people are likely to be in a shelter and what their medical needs are. That way, first responders can better delegate workers and equipment.

The new app looks like the map you find on your phone, with red pins indicating the storm shelter locations. And because GPS is not always accurate, the app also includes actual coordinates, collected, verified and manually pinned by an inspector.

The app also details physical descriptions of what's above the shelter — for example, indicating that a shelter lies 5 feet from the northwest corner of a home's foundation slab.

"If we can see the slab, we can figure out roughly where it is, if we need to," Neidel says.

The app also enables first responders to check off each storm shelter as it's cleared, to prevent other crews from duplicating search efforts.

What started as a hobby to solve a problem in Moore is now something other first responders are asking about. Firefighters from other storm-prone communities are interested in Neidel's ideas.

"Having good coordinates for the shelter would be very important," says Bill Jorgensen, the public safety director for Williamson County, Tenn., just south of Nashville. "That's probably something we'll implement here, too, because that's a great idea."

Neidel has been paying to develop the app out of his own pocket, but now, he's trying to figure out how he can get it funded so he can get it into the app store to share with other fire departments.

Now a story of innovation out of a natural disaster. This time last year, residents of Moore, Oklahoma, were just starting to recover after a massive tornado flattened their city. One firefighter was so frustrated by the difficulty of finding people in storm shelters he began working on an app, to help locate them more quickly.

UNIDENTIFIED MAN: Yes, ma'am. We've got to go. We're getting them out there as soon as we can.

UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: Please hurry.

HUBBARD: One of the firefighters rushing out to rescue people that day was Shonn Neidel.

SHONN NEIDEL: We decided to go out in the neighborhood to see if we could help anybody. But that's when I really realized that we really didn't have a great system. I mean we knew the addresses and that's all we ever really thought we needed.

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HUBBARD: He stands in a neighborhood that's still being rebuilt. He recalls looked like a landfill. Hundreds of homes and all their contents blended together. Mattresses, cars, insulation, the streets signs and house numbers were gone. Because they didn't know where to dig, it took firefighters three days to check all the shelters to make sure no one was trapped.

Even for a six-foot tall, fit firefighter, the endless digging was overwhelming. That's where the idea for a new app was born.

NEIDEL: If I could walk up and say this is where we're going to dig, I would say it would speed it up a lot.

HUBBARD: Neidel is an easy going guy with a quick smile, but he likes stuff to work and the existing storm shelter registry didn't. As luck would have it, before he became a firefighter, he worked at IBM as a field tech. So after the tornado, he recruited his brother-in-law, a computer programmer, and they started building an app that firefighters can use to find people more efficiently, even when cell service is down.

NEIDEL: If you've ever been in a situation like this, it's already stressful enough and it's chaotic. And you don't want to try to learn something in that situation, so this is, you know, I call it nuts and bolts. It's simple but it works.

HUBBARD: In his neatly pressed, grey-blue uniform, Neidel holds an iPad and points to a blue dot on a map, as he demonstrates how the app works. For one, it shows how many people are likely to be in a shelter and what their medical needs are, so first responders can better delegate workers and equipment.

His new app looks like a map you'd find on your phone, with red pins indicating the storm shelter locations. And because GPS is not always accurate, the app also includes actual coordinates, and physical descriptions of what's above the shelter.

NEIDEL: And it's like this would be in the front yard, five feet off the corner of the garage or whatever. So we'll, you know, if we can see the slab we can figure out roughly where it is, if we need to.

HUBBARD: Firefighters from other storm-prone communities are also interested in Neidel's ideas. Bill Jorgensen is the public safety director for Williamson County, Tennessee, just south of Nashville.

BILL JORGENSEN: Having good coordinates from a shelter would be very important. And that's probably something we'll implement here too, because that's a great idea. If that app were available and we could integrate it in with our systems that we have in place now, I definitely would like to take a look at it.

HUBBARD: So what started as a night-time hobby to solve a problem in his own city is now something other first responders are asking about. So far Neidel has been paying to develop the app out of his own pocket. Now, he's trying to figure out how he can get it funded, so he can get it in the app store and share it with other fire departments.

For NPR News, I'm Rachel Hubbard in Moore, Oklahoma.

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